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Artist’s Talk - Colonial Appetites: Sugar’s Journey from Royal Tables to Indigenous Communities

 

Facilitated by Dr Miki Seifert and Dr Arini Loader

1pm – 2pm, Saturday 2 August

Toi Pōneke Gallery

Free

Dr Miki Seifert and Dr Arini Loader

In the third of three artist’s talks about Azúcar/Sugar, the latest installation from With Lime, join Dr Miki Seifert and Dr Arini Loader at ‘The Colonisers’ Banquet Table’. Dr Seifert will talk about how sugar was transformed from an exotic luxury item into a global ubiquity. Dr Loader will use te reo Māori as a gateway to talk about sugar’s associated health and societal issues along with alcohol and other colonial introductions. 


Panelist’s Biographies

Dr Miki Seifert

Miki Seifert has a PhD from Victoria University of Wellington and a B.A. in French and Political Science from Moravian College. Since 2007, she has lived in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.

Her body of work ranges from performances, installations and videos with her collaborator William Franco to solo work of mixed media paintings to writing and artbooks. Her movement training (Butoh, contact improvisation, ballet, circus arts and gymnastics) imbues her work with flow, timing, placement, and a balance between the improvised and the choreographed.

She is best known for “He rawe tona kakahu/She wore a becoming dress”, a Butoh performance about gender and colonisation. Her performative research is published in The Routledge Companion to Butoh Performance and the Brazilian Journal on Presence Studies.

She studied Butoh with Diego Pinon, Oguri, and Shinichi Momo Koga; contact improvisation with Carmella Herman; and modern dance at the Martha Graham and Alvin Ailey Studios in New York.


 

Dr Arini Loader

Dr Arini Loader is a Senior Lecturer in Māori history at Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington. She belongs to Ngāti Raukawa, Ngāti Whakaue, and Te Whānau-a-Apanui and who is fortunate enough to live and work at one of the places she calls home beneath te pae maunga o Tararua, where the sun descends into the sea over Kapiti. Her work is grounded in Indigenous knowledges and methodologies and highlights Indigenous agency, creativity, power, and beauty. 

The words of Cherrie Moraga (2011) speak to her approach:
'The best of creative writing...is able to traverse great borders of mind and matter. The distinctions disappear. Our present moment becomes history. History is enacted myth. Myth is remembered story. Story makes medicine. I am in daily search of these acts of remembering of who we once were…
I write to remember.
I make rite (ceremony) to remember.
It is my right to remember.'


Azúcar/Sugar

12 July - 8 August

What is the connection between sugar, colonisation, global trade and climate change?

Azúcar/Sugar is an explorative gallery experience that uses sugar sculptures, videos and digital art to trace how European and US conquest terraformed the environment from a living entity that encompassed the living spirits of the land, water, plants, animals and humans into an inert repository of resources to be harvested and harnessed for profit. Azúcar/Sugar is the latest installation from With Lime, the long-standing collaboration between William Franco and Miki Seifert.